Scanning system and method for imaging and sequencing

ABSTRACT

A scanning detection system is provided wherein emissions from locations in a flow cell are detected. In some embodiments, the system can comprise an excitation source, a photocleavage source, and modulating optics configured to cause an excitation beam generated by the excitation source to irradiate a first group of the fixed locations and to cause a photocleavage beam generated by the photocleavage source to irradiate a second group of the fixed locations, which is separate and apart from the first group of fixed locations. Methods of detecting sequencing reactions using such a system are also provided.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No.12/384,516, filed Apr. 6, 2009 which claims benefit under 35 U.S.C.Section 119(e) from earlier U.S. Provisional Patent Application No.61/042,621, filed Apr. 4, 2008, which disclosures are hereinincorporated by reference in their entirety.

FIELD

The present teachings relate to scanning systems for image detection.

BACKGROUND

Various sequencing instrumentation, such as the SOLiD® system from LifeTechnologies Corporation, can use a tiling approach to create and/orgenerate imaging data. In such an approach, a stage capable of beingpositioned in X and Y dimensions may be used to move a portion of aslide or substrate, containing sequencing beads or other materials, intoview of a camera or other imaging apparatus. Once positioned that stagecan be stopped and allowed to settle prior to commencement ofintegration and/or imaging. This process can be repeated over a numberof different iterations or cycles. It has been observed for varioussequencing instrumentation, approximately the same amount of time isused to move the stage as to acquire sequencing data. Such systems mayfurther take multiple scans, for example, one for each nucleotide, dye,or color (for a total of four or more scans). This type of system can betime consuming and costly. A need exists to reduce acquisition time, andreduce costs, while at the same time generating accurate sequenceinformation.

Moreover, the benefits of raising excitation power are limited if themajority of time is not spent with the camera collecting emissionphotons, but is instead spent moving from one position to another. Aneed to address this limitation also exists.

SUMMARY

According to various embodiments of the present teachings, a system isprovided for detecting emissions from a plurality of locations on asubstrate. The system can comprise one or more irradiation sourcesconfigured to irradiate the substrate A first reaction, such as afluorescence emission, can be made to occur at the first group oflocations on the substrate. In some embodiments, a second, differentreaction, can be made to occur at a second group of locations on thesubstrate. A scanning detector, for example, a detector array, can beincluded that is positioned with respect to the one or more irradiationsources so as to collect emission from the first group of locationsand/or collect emission from the second group of locations.

Improvements to imaging approaches can be achieved by implementingmultiple cameras or imaging devices for acquiring data simultaneously.Such systems can share a single excitation source for multiple cameras(for example, two or four cameras). As a result, the throughput of thesystem can be improved by making modifications to the imaging system.Such modifications may desirably be made while substantially leaving therest of the system unchanged. Additionally, if the excitation power ofthe imaging system is increased, the integration time can be reduced,and the system speed can be correspondingly increased.

According to various embodiments of the present teachings, an imagingmethod is provided that can comprise imaging a ligation reaction. Themethod can further comprise the step of photocleaving protective groupsfrom one or more of a plurality of polynucleotides after one or morescanning steps. A flow cell can comprise a plurality of beads therein,and a plurality of polynucleotides can be immobilized on the pluralityof beads. A plurality of locations to be imaged can be locationsoccupied by the plurality of beads.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS

Various embodiments of the present teachings are exemplified in theaccompanying drawings. The teachings are not limited to the embodimentsdepicted, and include equivalent structures and methods as set forth inthe following description and known to those of ordinary skill in theart. In the drawings:

It is to be understood that both the foregoing general description andthe following detailed description are exemplary and explanatory onlyand are intended to provide a further explanation of the variousembodiments of the present teachings.

FIG. 1 illustrates a representative fluorometry scanning systemaccording to various embodiments of the present teachings.

FIG. 2 depicts a system and method according to various embodimentsusing a time-delay integration made whereby a detector array is scannedacross a fixed location and brightness measured sequentially by variouspixels is compounded to enhance the detected signal.

FIG. 3 depicts an embodiment of a time-delay integration single moleculesequencing scanning system that can be used according to variousembodiments of the present teachings.

FIG. 4 depicts the same flow cell and a scanning system depicted in FIG.3 above a first, early position during a scanning operation.

FIG. 5 depicts the same scanning system shown in FIGS. 3 and 4, but at alater position during a scanning operation relative to the positiondepicted in FIG. 4.

FIGS. 6-8 depict two consecutive positions as an objective with respectto an etched groove in a substrate, according various embodiments of thepresent teachings.

FIG. 9 illustrates a graph of probability versus time for a singlelabeled nucleotide incorporation event and a photocleavage operation,over the course of 3 seconds.

FIG. 10 is a further illustration of the graph of FIG. 9, over thecourse of 0.10 seconds.

FIG. 11 shows an exemplary set of prisms that can be used as mirrors forone or more irradiation beams and/or one or more emission beams during ascanning operation according to various embodiments.

FIG. 12A is a graph of excitation efficiency versus wavelength for fourexemplary markers that can be used together, for example, as a set,according to various embodiments of the present teachings.

FIG. 12B is a graph of fluorescence intensity versus wavelength for theexemplary markers of FIG. 12A.

FIG. 13A is a graph of relative irradiation intensity versus wavelengthfor a pair of irradiation sources used according to various embodiments,wherein the irradiation beams generated by the two sources are of twodifferent wavelengths (colors) and can be used to irradiate different orthe same fixed locations on a substrate, simultaneously.

FIG. 13B is a graph showing percent transmission versus wavelength for aconditioning filter used to condition the beams represented in FIG. 13A.

FIG. 13C is a graph showing percent transmission versus wavelength for abandpass filter used to filter light signals produced by markers excitedby the light from the irradiation beams represented in FIG. 13A.

FIG. 13D is a graph showing relative emission intensity versuswavelength for the light filtered through the bandpass filter having theproperties depicted in FIG. 13C.

FIG. 14 is an image of a substrate comprising a plurality of locationsarranged in an orderly array, which substrate has been scanned accordingto various embodiments of the present teachings, wherein the imagerepresents a square portion of the substrate.

FIG. 15 is an image of a substrate comprising a plurality of locationsarranged in an non-orderly array, which substrate has been scannedaccording to various embodiments of the present teachings, wherein theimage represents a square portion of the substrate.

FIG. 16 is a broken view of a substrate comprising a plurality oflocations arranged in an orderly array, wherein the substrate is to beimaged according to various embodiments of the present teachings, andwherein the laser excitation beam used to excite markers at thelocations is in the form of a line that has a width that is only abouthalf of the width of each location along the line.

FIG. 17 is a top view of a linear image array aligned above the line oflocations shown in FIG. 16, which has been irradiated with theexcitation beam shown in FIG. 16, wherein wide pixels of the image arrayare shown centered with respect to the line of locations.

FIG. 18 is a broken view of a substrate comprising a plurality oflocations arranged in an orderly array, wherein the substrate is to beimaged according to various embodiments of the present teachings, andwherein the laser excitation beam used to excite markers at thelocations is in the form of a line that has a width that exceeds thewidth of each location along the line.

FIG. 19 is a top view of a linear image array aligned above the line oflocations shown in FIG. 18, which line of locations has been irradiatedwith the excitation beam shown in FIG. 18, wherein pixels of the imagearray are shown centered with respect to the line of locations, pluralpixels are shown above each location in the line, each pixel of theimage array has a width that is less than the width of the respectivelocation being imaged.

FIG. 20 is a broken view of a substrate comprising a plurality oflocations arranged in an orderly array, wherein the substrate is to beimaged according to various embodiments of the present teachings, andwherein the laser excitation beam used to excite markers at thelocations has been shaped into the form of an area beam having a widthequal to the width of five lines of locations such that a first area oflocations can simultaneously be irradiated with an excitation beam.

FIG. 21 is a top view of a two-dimensional image array aligned above thefive-line area of locations shown in FIG. 20, which area of locationshas been irradiated with the area excitation beam shown in FIG. 20,wherein pixels of the two-dimensional image array are shown above thearea of locations, plural pixels are shown above each location in thearea, each pixel of the image array has a width that is less than thewidth of the respective location being imaged, and the two-dimensionalimage array can be operated in a time-delay integration mode.

DESCRIPTION

According to various embodiments of the present teachings, a system isprovided for detecting emissions from a plurality of locations on asubstrate, for example, fixed locations corresponding to locations ofimmobilized polynucleotides on a substrate. The system comprises a firstirradiation source configured to irradiate the substrate and disposedfor irradiating a first group of the locations, and a second irradiationsource configured to irradiate a second group of the locations, whereinthe second irradiation source is fixed with respect to the firstirradiation source such that the second group of locations is spacedfrom and excludes the first group of locations on the substrate. Assuch, a first reaction, such as a fluorescence emission, can be made tooccur at the first group of locations while a second, differentreaction, for example, a photocleavage reaction, can be made to occur atthe second group of locations. A scanning detector, for example, adetector array, can be included that is positioned with respect to thefirst irradiation source and the second irradiation source so as tocollect emission from the first group of locations without collectingemission from the second group of locations. A translation stage canalso be provided and configured to move the first irradiation source,the second irradiation source, and the scanning detector, with respectto each other.

In some embodiments, each location can correspond to the location of apolynucleotide, and at least some of the polynucleotides can be labeledwith respective markers that fluoresce when exposed to excitation light.The system can comprise a substrate, wherein the substrate is positionedwith respect to the first irradiation source so as to be irradiated bythe first irradiation source. The substrate can comprise a flow cell anda plurality of labeled polynucleotides disposed in the flow cell. Theflow cell can comprise a plurality of channels separated from oneanother.

The first irradiation source can comprise at least one laser source anda holographic beam shaper. The scanning detector can comprise atwo-dimensional charge-coupled device. In some embodiments, the systemcan comprise modulating optics. The modulating optics can be disposedbetween the first irradiation source and the scanning detector. Thescanning detector can comprise a point detector, a line detector, or animage detector.

In some embodiments, a system for detecting fluorescently labeledpolynucleotides is provided, and comprises a substrate comprising afirst end, a second end, one or more channels formed therein, and aplurality of labeled polynucleotide beads immobilized in the one or morechannels, each of the labeled polynucleotide beads having a diameter andbeing labeled with a respective marker that is responsive to radiationand that emits emission light indicative of the presence of at least onenucleotide. The system can comprise at least one irradiation source foremitting radiation and disposed for irradiating the plurality of labeledpolynucleotide beads to thereby excite the markers responsive to theradiation and to cause the markers to emit emission light. Modulatingoptics can be provided that comprise at least one of a cylindrical lens,a holographic beam shaper, and a set of prisms including at least onetrombone prism. The modulating optics can be configured to shaperadiation emitted from the at least one irradiation source onto aportion of the labeled polynucleotide beads such that the emittedradiation irradiates an area having a dimension that is the same as thediameter of the labeled polynucleotide beads, or smaller. The system cancomprise a scanning detector array positioned with respect to theplurality of labeled polynucleotide beads, and configured to collect theemission light produced by the markers and to produce chargescorresponding to the emission light. The detector array can have anoutput and a time-delay integration (TDI) system can be provided thataccumulates charges corresponding to the emission light, within thedetector array, and reads accumulated charges at the output of thescanning detector array.

In some embodiments, the system can comprise second modulating opticsdisposed between the at least one irradiation source and the scanningdetector array. The second modulating optics can comprise a cylindricallens. The TDI system can be configured to accumulate charge by moving,relative to one another, the at least one irradiation source and theplurality of labeled polynucleotide beads, without moving the at leastone irradiation source and the scanning detector array relative to oneanother. In some embodiments, the TDI system can accumulate charge bymoving relative to one another, the scanning detector array and themodulating optics.

The one or more locations can comprise over 500 locations, for example,over 1000 locations, over 10,000 locations, over 100,000 locations, over1,000,000 locations, over 10,000,000 locations, or over 1,000,000,000locations. The scanning detector array can be configured to collectemission light produced by markers in at one or more channelssequentially, for example, from 2 to 10 channels sequentially, abouteight channels sequentially, at least 100 channels, sequentially, or thelike. Each of the one or more channels can begin at the first end of thesubstrate and run continuously to the second end of the substrate.

According to various embodiments, a method for detecting a sequence ofnucleotides of a polynucleotide is provided. The method can comprisegenerating a first beam of radiation with an excitation source,directing the first beam at a flow cell comprising a plurality oflocations and a plurality of polynucleotides immobilized at theplurality of locations, then causing a first reaction in the flow cell,the first reaction involving at least some of the plurality ofpolynucleotides, and then scanning the flow cell with a scanningdetector array, to detect radiation emitted from the plurality of fixedlocations. In some embodiments, a scanning operation can occur beforethe first reaction. The method can further comprise irradiating the flowcell with a second beam of radiation generated by the same or adifferent excitation source, subsequent to the first reaction, forexample, by radiation of a different wavelength. The flow cell can bescanned with the scanning detector array before and after the firstreaction, to detect radiation emitted from the plurality of locations. Asecond reaction can then be caused in the flow cell, involving at leastsome of the polynucleotides. Then the flow cell can be irradiated with athird beam of radiation generated by the same or a different excitationsource, subsequent to the second reaction. After again scanning the flowcell with the scanning detector array subsequent to the second reaction,to detect radiation emitted from the plurality of fixed locations,information ascertained from the scanning steps can be used to determinea sequence of nucleotides of one or more of the plurality ofnucleotides.

The method can comprise a ligation reaction, for example, a ligationreaction before each scanning step. The method can optionally comprisethe step of photocleaving protective groups from one or more of theplurality of polynucleotides after one or more of the scanning steps.The flow cell can comprise a plurality of beads therein, the pluralityof polynucleotides can be immobilized on the plurality of beads, and theplurality of locations can be locations occupied by the plurality ofbeads. In some embodiments, the plurality of polynucleotides cancomprise a plurality of single molecule polynucleotides each immobilizedat a respective one of the locations.

In some embodiments, the method can further comprise shaping the firstbeam, the second beam, and the third beam with modulating opticsdisposed between the excitation source and the flow cell. The modulatingoptics can comprise at least one of a cylindrical lens, a holographicbeam shaper, and a set of prisms comprising a trombone prism. The flowcell can comprise a plurality of channels or grooves formed therein, forexample, the plurality of grooves can comprise only a few grooves, as inone, two, three, or four, or as many as at least 10,000 grooves. Theplurality of polynucleotides can be immobilized on a plurality of beadsand the beads can be disposed in the plurality of grooves. In someembodiments, the flow cell can comprise from 10,000 to 1,000,000,000grooves for containing individual strands of DNA. In some embodiments,the plurality of polynucleotides can comprise at least somepolynucleotides bearing protective groups, and the method can furthercomprise photocleaving the protective groups with a photocleavage beamsource that differs from the excitation source.

In some embodiments, the method can comprise using a time delayintegration system, for example, to generate a signal indicative of thepresence or absence of a nucleotide at one or more of the fixedlocations.

According to various embodiments, the present teachings refer to ascanning system and method. The system can be configured to detectbiopolymers, for example, a biopolymer comprising a detectable signal.According to various embodiments, an optical system 100, is provided asshown in FIG. 1, and comprises a light source 122, an optical device 106(shown generally as the features surrounded by the dotted line), asubstrate 126 to be scanned, a detector 102, an excitation filter 120,and a second optical element 114. Light source 122, substrate 126, anddetector 102 can be any of those as described herein. According tovarious embodiments, optical device 106 can comprise an optical devicehaving structures similar to those described herein, such as anexcitation filter 116, a beamsplitter 112, and an emission filter 108.Optical system 100 can also comprise a first optical element 116 and asecond optical element 118 that may or may not be included in opticaldevice 106.

According to various embodiments, first optical element 116 can comprisea mask, such as a mask, that includes a plurality of apertures. Eachaperture can be adjusted to reduce non-uniformities in light emittedfrom the immobilized polynucleotides on substrate 126, which can includechannels 124. For example, the arrangement of an aperture, such as thesize and/or shape of the apertures, can be adjusted. In general, theapertures can be adjusted so light from locations having a similarvolume and a similar concentration of sample, and that use a similar diewill pass through the mask having a similar light signal, such as asimilar relative response. As such, the signal reaching detector 102will be an accurate representation of the reaction.

For example, although a first location and a second location of asubstrate may contain similar volumes and concentrations ofpolynucleotides, and may also use similar dyes, the light from each ofthe first and second locations reaching the detector may not be similar.In various embodiments, a first aperture and a second aperture of themask can be positioned next to the first channel and the second channel,respectively, of substrate 126. The arrangement of the first and secondapertures can be adjusted so that non-uniformities in the light from thefirst and second locations that reach the detector can be reduced.

According to various embodiments, the first optical element 116 cancomprise a plurality of lenses with each of the plurality of lenseshaving a unique numerical aperture (NA). The NA of the lenses, as wellas the position of the lenses, can be adjusted to reduce thenon-uniformities in light emitted from the markers in the channels ofsubstrate 126. In some embodiments, the lenses can be molded to have theunique NA. In general, the NA can be adjusted so light from channelshaving a similar volume and a similar concentration of markers, and thatuse a similar die, will pass through the mask having a similar lightsignal. As such, the signal reaching detector 102 can be an accuraterepresentation of the reaction.

According to various embodiments, the optical system can furthercomprise an additional optical element 114 that can comprise, forexample, an additional filter such as a neutral density filter that canvary the transmission of the emitted light from locations on thesubstrate. For example, additional optical element 114 can vary thetransmission based on the position of channels in substrate 126.

According to various embodiments, optical system 106 can furthercomprise a second optical element 114. Second optical element 114 cancomprise a mask, a neutral density filter, or a lens having apredetermined NA. Second optical element 114 aids in reducingnon-uniformities in the light from light source 106. Second opticalelement 114 can be positioned to reduce non-uniformities in the lightfrom light source 122 before the light reaches the substrate 126.

According to various embodiments, the type of adjustment to opticalelements 114 and 116 can be determined using any of a variety oftechniques either separately or in combination. Exemplary techniquesinclude sequential ray trace models, non-sequential ray trace models,radiometric formulae, empirical measurements of light reaching thesample space, and empirical measurements of light reaching the detector.

According to various embodiments, light is emitted from light source 122and passes through excitation filter 124 and optionally through secondoptical element 114 before impinging on beamsplitter 112. A portion ofthe light impinging on beamsplitter 112 is directed locations onsubstrate 126 where it causes the samples to luminesce. The lightemitted from the samples is passed through first optical element 116.The light is directed through filter 104 and detected by detector 102.

According to various embodiments, biopolymers can comprise an analyte,for example, one or more polynucleotides. The system can comprise one ormore biopolymers that comprise an intrinsically detectable signal,and/or biopolymers that have been derivitized with a label or markerthat confers a desired type of detectability. Various methods forlabeling analytes with detectable moieties are well known in the art,such as excitable reporters, radioactive isotopes, fluorescent dyes,spin labels, chemiluminescent compounds and the like to stimulatedetectable emission indicative of the nature of the analyte. When theanalyte is a polynucleotide, labeling by hybridization with a labeledprobe can also be used. The analyte can be labeled with a dye marker, afluorescing dye, a free-floating dye, a reporter dye, a probe dye, anintercalating dye, a quantum dot, a molecular beacon, a linear probe, aquantum dot media, a quantum dot bead, a dye-labeled bead, a dyeattached to an analyte associated with a bead, or a combination thereof.The marker can be responsive to radiation and can be configured to emitemission light indicative of the presence of at least one nucleotide.

Exemplary analytes can include nucleic acids, both single and doublestranded, proteins, carbohydrates, viruses, cells, whole cells, singlemolecules, polymerases, organelles, organic polymers, other biologicalsamples, particles, labeled media, labeled beads, and the like. Theanalytes can include biomolecules, for example, cells, proteins, DNA,RNA, polynucleotides, polypeptides, polysaccharides, and small moleculeanalytes. In some embodiments, the analyte can comprise a polymerase orother enzyme suitable for an extension reaction. According to variousembodiments, the analyte can be a selected-sequence polynucleotide, andan analyte-specific reagent including a sequence-selective reagent fordetecting the polynucleotide can be associated with the polynucleotide.Polynucleotide analytes can be detected by any suitable method, forexample, polymerase chain reaction, ligase chain reaction,oligonucleotide ligation assay, hybridization assay, antibody assay,affinity assay, streptavidin/biotin assay, single base extensionreaction, or a combination thereof.

An example of a marker compound can be a dye marker. Any suitablemarker, such as, for example, a fluorophore, can be used. Fluorophoresuseful according to various embodiments can include those that can becoupled to organic molecules, particularly proteins and nucleic acids,and that can emit a detectable amount of radiation or light signal inresponse to excitation by an available excitation source. Suitablemarkers can encompass materials having fluorescent, phosphorescent,and/or other electromagnetic radiation emissions. Irradiation of themarkers can cause them to emit light at varying frequencies depending onthe type of marker used.

In some embodiments, a quantum dot can be incorporated into the systemto facilitate detection of a polynucleotide or reaction product thereof.Quantum dots can be molecular-scale optical beacons. The quantum dotnanocrystals can behave like molecular LEDs (light emitting diodes) by“lighting up” biological binding events with a broad palette of appliedcolors. Quantum dots can provide many more colors than conventionalfluorophores. Quantum dots can possess many other very desirable opticalproperties. In some embodiments, quantum dots can be used as a means tolocalize excitation for fluorophores utilizing FRET. Nanocrystal quantumdots can be covalently linked to biomolecules using standard conjugationchemistry. The quantum dot conjugate can then be used to detect abinding partner in a wide range of assays. According to variousembodiments, streptavidin can be attached to quantum dots to detectbiotinylated molecules in a variety of assays. Quantum dots can also beattached to antibodies and oligonucleotides. Any assay that currentlyuses, for example, fluorescent-tagged molecules, colorimetric enzymes,or colloidal gold, can be improved with quantum dot nanocrystal-taggedconjugates. An exemplary quantum dot implementation is available fromQuantum Dot Corporation of Haywood, Calif. under the trademark QDOT.More information about quantum dots and their applications can be foundat, for example, www.qdots.com, and in U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,207,229,6,251,303, 6,306,310, 6,319,426, 6,322,901, 6,326,144, 6,426,513, andU.S. Pat. No. 6,444,143 to Bawendi et al., U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,990,479,6,207,392, and U.S. Pat. No. 6,423,551 to Weiss et al., U.S. Pat. No.6,468,808 to Nie et al., and U.S. Pat. No. 6,274,323 to Bruchez et al.,which describe a variety of biological applications, methods of quantumdot manufacturing, and apparatuses for quantum dot nanocrystals andconjugates, all of which are incorporated herein by reference, in theirentireties.

According to various embodiments, the detection system and method of thepresent teachings can be used with biopolymers that have been labeledwith energy transfer dyes. Energy transfer dyes can comprise a largeStokes' shift (i.e., the difference between the wavelength at which thedye has maximum absorbance and the wavelength at which the dye hasmaximum emission) so that the fluorescent emission is readilydistinguished from the light source used to excite the dye. Examples ofenergy transfer dyes are described in U.S. Pat. No. 7,012,141 B2, U.S.Pat. Nos. 7,157,572 B2, and 7,402,671 B2 to Lee, and in U.S. Pat. No.7,169,939 B2, to Lee et al., all of which are incorporated herein byreference, in their entireties. Energy transfer dyes like the ones thatcan be used with the present invention, can comprise fluorescein-cyanideconjugates, for example, BigDyes®, available from Applied Biosystems,LLC, Foster City, Calif. In some embodiments, a quantum dot can be usedas the donor.

According to various embodiments, the system can comprise a substrate.The one or more biopolymers can be disposed on or in the substrate. Thesubstrate can comprise one or more reaction regions. As referred toherein, a reaction region can comprise a channel, a flow cell, a groove,a trench, a well, an opening, a trough, or any combination thereof. Thereaction region can be partially open to the surrounding environment orenclosed from the surrounding environment. In some embodiments, thebiopolymers can be disposed on the surface of a reactant region. In someembodiments the biopolymers can be disposed in the reactant region. Oneexample of the type of substrates that comprise one or more reactantregions can be found in International Publication No. WO 2006/135782 A2,to Nordman et al., which is incorporated herein by reference, in itsentirety.

According to various embodiments, the one or more reaction regions cancomprise a reaction surface disposed therein. The reaction surface canbe, for example, the surface of a labeled bead. The bead can further beimmobilized to the reaction region, or the bead can be adapted to movearound within a reaction region. In some embodiments, the reactionregion itself can comprise a reaction surface. The reaction region cancomprise one or more labeled analytes immobilized on its surface, orimmobilized within the reaction region. In some embodiments, theanalytes can be immobilized in a non-orderly manner, or in an orderlymanner. Examples of immobilization and mobilization of analytes on asubstrate can be found in U.S. Patent Application Publication No. US2008/0241892 A1, to Reel et al., U.S. Patent Application No. US2008/0105831 A1, to Reel et al., U.S. Patent Application Publication No.US 2008/0220537 A1, to Foquet, U.S. Patent Application Publication No.US 2008/0176769 A1, to Rank et al., and International Publication No. WO2006/135782 A2, to Nordman et al., all of which are incorporated hereinby reference, in their entireties.

In some embodiments, the reaction region surface, for example a beadsurface, can comprise attachment characteristics. The surface cancomprise low-density reactive groups, for example, the low-densitysubstrate described in U.S. Patent Application Publication No. US2007/0077564 A1, to Roitman et al., which is incorporated herein byreference, in its entirety. The reaction region surface can compriseactive regions thereon, for example, the enzyme attachment and exclusionsurfaces described in U.S. Patent Application Publication Nos. US2007/0238679 A1, US 2008/0032301 A1, US 2008/0153100 A1, US 20080176769A1, to Rank et al., and US 2008/0003571 A1 to McKernan et al., all ofwhich are incorporated herein by reference, in their entireties.

According to various embodiments, the system can comprise a stage. Thestage can be configured to receive and hold one or more substrates. Thestage can be configured to move in an X and Y axis of rotation, therebycausing the one or more substrates to move in an X and Y axis ofrotation. The stage can be configured to move a portion of a substrateinto view of a detector or other imaging apparatus. Once positioned thestage can be configured to stop, and the stage can settle prior tocommencement of imaging. In some embodiments, the stage is in continuousmotion, such that the stage does not stop until the entire substrate hasbeen detected by the detector. In some embodiments, the stage can movethe objective with respect to the detector and substrate, or thedetector and objective can be moved with respect to the substrate.

According to various embodiments, the system can comprise one or moredetectors. As referred to herein, a detector can comprise a detectorarray, an objective, an objective lens, a camera, a photodetector, acharge-coupled device (CCD), a complimentary metal-oxide-semiconductor(CMOS) device, a point scanner, a line scanner, an image scanner,another type of optical detector, or a combination thereof. The detectorcan also comprise a plurality of detectors, for example, two detectors,four detectors, or any other amount of detectors desired. In someembodiments, the detector can be configured to detect multiple opticalsignals from a single source, for example, the systems described in U.S.Patent Application Publication No. US 2007/0036511 A1, to Lundquist etal., which is incorporated herein by reference, in its entirety. In someembodiments, the detector can be configured to detect simultaneousreal-time monitoring of optical signals from multiple sources, forexample, the systems described in U.S. Patent Application PublicationNos. US 2007/0188750 A1, and US 2008/0030628 A1, to Lundquist et al.,and in U.S. Pat. No. 6,856,390 B2 to Nordman et al., all of which areincorporated herein by reference, in their entireties.

According to various embodiments, the detector can comprise a time-delayintegration (TDI) system. In the detector, photogenerated chargecollected in the photoactive elements or pixels of the detector can betransferred toward a serial register one row at a time. The chargeinformation in the serial row can be read by using a correspondingsingle on-chip amplifier or readout register of the detector. By way ofexample, for a 256×256 element CCD, each time a single imaging area (onerow) is transferred to the serial register, n readouts (where ncorresponds to the length of the area to be scanned) of the thustransferred area are performed, each readout corresponding to adifferent spectral element or pixel in the row. The above processcontinues until all 256 pixels in all 256 rows have been read.

FIG. 2 shows an exemplary time-delay integration process that can beembodied according to the present teachings. As shown in FIG. 2, adetector array 93 can be scanned in a direction depicted by directionalarrow 95 across a fixed location 91 on a substrate. According to variousembodiments, the fixed location can comprise the location at which apolynucleotide is immobilized and has been reacted to emit radiation. Asshown in FIG. 2, emitted radiation from fixed location 91 is detected atTime1 by a first array pixel 97, and the radiation emitted has beenmeasured with respect to brightness as shown in the graph underneath theconfiguration shown at Time1.

According to the method depicted in FIG. 2, scanning movement ofdetector array 93 in direction 95 results in the positioning of pixel 99over fixed location 91 at Time2. Brightness measured at Time2 is thencompounded to the brightness measured by pixel 97 at Time1 and thecompounded brightness is shown in the graph below the configurationshown at Time2. According to the method depicted, the scanning operationthen results in the configuration shown at Time3, whereby the detectorarray has been moved in direction 95 to the point where pixel 101 islocated above the omission radiated from fixed location 91. Brightnessmeasured by pixel 101 at Time3 is then compounded with the brightnessmeasured by pixel 99 at Time2 and the brightness measured by pixel 97 atTime1 to form a compounded brightness graph shown below theconfiguration depicted in Time3. This and similar time-delay integrationmethods can be used according to various embodiments of the presentteachings.

According to various embodiments, another scanning system according tovarious embodiments of the present teachings is depicted in FIGS. 3-5.It is to be understood that the features of the optical configurationshown in FIG. 1 and the time-delay integration system and method shownin FIG. 2 can be incorporated in whole, in part, or not at all, inconnection with the system depicted in FIGS. 3-5. Although FIG. 3 labelsthe scanning system as a time-delay integration, single moleculesequencing (TDI SMS) scanning system, it is to be understood the systemdoes not necessarily have to operate in a time-delay integration mode.Furthermore, it is to be understood that the system can be used in thedetection of any emission in general from locations on a substrate, forexample, to detect multiple copies of polynucleotides immobilized on asingle bead, for example, where many such beads are immobilized on asubstrate. By “immobilized,” with reference to the beads, it is to beunderstood that the beads need not be physically or chemically bound tothe substrate, but rather, can simply rest on the substrate but berestricted from movement with respect to the substrate during a scanningoperation.

As shown in FIGS. 3-5, the system can be used to detect reactions on asubstrate, for example, reactions in a flow cell 200 as depicted. Flowcell 200 can be provided with a first input port 212 and an output port214, between which reagents, reactants, or other materials can betransported to effect various reactions in flow cell 200. Flow cell 200can be, but is not necessarily, provided with a plurality of grooves orchannels formed therein or thereon. In some embodiments, exemplarygrooves or channels can comprise those described in U.S. Pat. No.6,856,390 B2 to Nordman et al. The scanning system can comprise adetector having at least an objective lens 210 that can be configured todetect emission from a first area 206, on or adjacent, flow cell 200.The system can comprise two irradiation sources (not shown), the firstof which can comprise an excitation source configured to generate anexcitation beam and direct the excitation beam to modulating optics 202,depicted in FIGS. 3-5 as a cylindrical lens 202. Another irradiationsource (not shown) can be configured to generate a photocleavageradiation beam toward and through second modulating optics 204, depictedas a cylindrical lens 204. According to various embodiments, modulatingoptics 202 are configured to direct the excitation beam at area 206 in amanner such that the excitation beam is shaped to fall incident on flowcell 200 in the form of area 206. Similarly, the photocleavage beammodulated by modulating optics 204 can be directed at, and shaped tofall incident on, area 208. As can be seen, objective 210 is configuredto detect emission from area 206 without detecting emission from area208. A scanning operation depicting use of such a system is shown inFIGS. 4 and 5.

As shown in FIG. 4, the system depicted in FIG. 3 is shown at a firstposition during an early portion of a scanning operation. Duringoperation, the entire system, but not including flow cell 200, is movedin the direction from left to right such that, after a period of time,the system is moved to a later position depicted in FIG. 5. Suchscanning, depicted in the sequential steps shown in FIGS. 4 and 5, showsthat the system operates to irradiate area 206 over flow cell 200 withan excitation beam, and to detect radiation emitted from area 206 usingobjective 210. In the situation where objective 210 is part of adetection system comprising a detector array, for example, an array ofpixels, it should be appreciated that the pixels can be individuallydedicated to various locations in flow cell 200 that fall within area206. It should also be appreciated that locations in flow cell 200 thatare within area 208 can be subjected to a photocleavage beam separateand apart from the excitation beam that is directed to area 206. Thus,the system can provide excitation of locations in area 206 whilesimultaneously providing photocleaving reactions at locations in area208.

As can be seen from the movement depicted from the position shown inFIG. 4 to the position shown in FIG. 5, shortly after an excitation anddetection operation at locations in the flow cell within area 206, thesame locations are then subjected to a photocleavage beam and aphotocleavage operation. According to various methods, subsequent to apolynucleotide being subject to a photocleavage operation, an additionalnucleotide can thereafter be incorporated onto the polynucleotide whichhad been subjected to the photocleavage operation.

Another embodiment of a scanning detection system according to variousembodiments of the present teachings is depicted in FIGS. 6-8. FIGS. 6-8depict a sequence of movements of an objective 300 toward and into closeproximity with a flow cell 306 comprising a channel 308. In theembodiments shown, excitation beams shaped by modulating optics 302 aredirected to a first side 310 of flow cell 306. Also, a photocleavagebeam shaped by modulating optics 304 is also directed to first side 310of flow cell 306. As can be seen in FIG. 8, objective 300 detectsemissions from locations within channel 308, from a bottom side 312 offlow cell 306, which is opposite top side 310 onto which the excitationbeam and photocleavage beam are directed on their ways toward channel308. In the exemplary embodiments shown, the reaction locations can beon the underside of the flow cell wall 309 bearing top surface 310. Insuch an embodiment, the objective has a working distance that includesdetecting through bottom substrate 311 of flow cell 306 and through anyreagent in channel 308.

In some embodiments, TDI can be achieved by moving, relatively to oneanother, the substrate and the detector. Under a normal read-outapproach, the motion of the images on the detector produces a blur. InTDI, the shutter can be eliminated. In some embodiments, the shifting ofrows of the detector can be synchronized to the movement of thesubstrate/stage. After this time period, the charge on the detector canbe shifted one row closer to the serial register, such that thefluorescence from the analyte corresponds to the same charge informationon the detector. Therefore, distinct from the physical rows of thedetector, there exists in TDI according to various embodiments, sets ofcontinuously moving rows of accumulating photogenerated charge.Exemplary TDI systems can be found in FIGS. 1, 10, and 11 of U.S. Pat.No. 7,280,207 B2, and U.S. Pat. No. 7,265,833 B2, to Oldham et al., bothof which are incorporated herein by reference, in their entireties.

According to various embodiments, the system can comprise one or morefilters. As referred to herein, a filter can comprise an emissionfilter, an excitation filter, a multi-notch filter, a Rugate filter, adichroic filter, bandpass filters, or a combination thereof. In someembodiments, a filter can be a single bandpass filter or a multiplebandpass filter. As used herein, a bandpass filter and a passband filtercan be used interchangeably. A multiple passband filter can be, forexample, a multi-notch filter, a multi-Rugate filter, or simply a Rugatefilter. A multiple passband filter can be used with an incoherent lightsource, for example, a halogen lamp, a white light source, and/or one ormore Light Emitting Diode (LED), or Organic LEDs emitting light atdifferent wavelengths. A multiple passband filter can be used with amultiple laser-based light source emitting light at differentwavelengths. Examples of manufacturing Rugate filters and Rugate beamsplitters can be found in FIG. 1 of U.S. Pat. No. 7,498,164 B2, which isincorporated herein by reference, in its entirety.

According to various embodiments, the system can comprise variousmodulating optics. Modulating optics can include beam shapers, beamsplitters, prisms, trombone prisms, sets of prisms, dichroic mirrors,lenses, cylindrical lenses, Fresnel lenses, focusing lenses, collimatinglenses, or any combination thereof. The modulating optics can bedisposed in the system, on path between the irradiation source and thesubstrate. The modulating optics can be disposed on path between thesubstrate and the detector. In some embodiments, the modulating opticscan comprise one or more holographic elements, for example, aholographic beam shaper. The one or more holographic optical elementscan be used to diffract light at various angles. The holographic beamshaper can create a “top hat” pattern, and can further distribute thelight such that it compensates for other parts of the optical system,such as making the edges brighter to compensate for vignetting. Examplesof holographic optical elements are described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,744,502and U.S. Pat. No. 7,006,215, to Hoff et al., both of which areincorporated herein by reference, in their entireties. In someembodiments excitation enhancements can be used to enhance energylevels, for example, the plasmons described in U.S. Patent ApplicationPublication No. 2008/0066549 A1, to Oldham et al., which is incorporatedherein by reference, in its entirety. TDI detection can be performed bymoving modulating optics relative to irradiation, by moving irradiationrelative to the substrate, and/or by moving optics and the substrate.

In some embodiments, modulating optics can be configured to combinemulti-spectral light from spatially separated sources. The use ofvarious optical elements to combine two different light sources areexemplified in FIGS. 1A-7B, of U.S. Pat. No. 7,248,359, to Boege, whichis incorporated herein by reference, in its entirety. In someembodiments, the system can be a system that is configured to operate inzero-mode waveguide (ZMW). A zero mode waveguide system is exemplifiedin FIG. 3 of U.S. Patent Application Publication No. US 2008/0226307 A1,to Lundquist et al., and FIGS. 1-2 of U.S. Pat. No. 6,917,726 B2 toLevene et al., both of which are incorporated herein by reference, intheir entireties.

According to various embodiments, the substrate itself can be configuredto direct excitation and emission light, for example, the detection celldescribed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,809,810 B2, and U.S. Pat. No. 6,888,628 B2to Carrillo, both of which are incorporated herein by reference, inthere entireties.

According to various embodiments, the system can comprise one or moreirradiation sources. The source of irradiation can be any of a varietyof light sources. The irradiation source can be, for example, an LED, anorganic LED, a non-coherent light source as known to those skilled inthe art, a solid state laser, a microwire laser, a white light source,or a combination thereof. As used herein, the terms “irradiationsource,” “light source,” “excitation source,” “or the like can includesingle or multiple sources of irradiation. As used herein, “LED” canrefer to an LED, an OLED, or multiplicities thereof. Further, accordingto various embodiments, the “LED” can include coherent irradiationsources, for example, a solid state laser source or a micro-wire lasersource. Each irradiation source can be configured to irradiate thesubstrate. Each irradiation source can be configured to irradiate afixed location or a group of fixed locations on the substrate.

In some embodiments, the system can comprise two or more irradiationsources. A first irradiation source can be configured to irradiate thesubstrate, and be disposed for irradiating a first group of fixedlocations of a plurality of fixed locations. A second irradiation sourcecan be configured to irradiate a second group of fixed locations of theplurality of fixed locations. The second irradiation source can be fixedwith respect to the first irradiation source such that the second groupof fixed locations is spaced away from and excludes the first group offixed locations on the substrate. In some embodiments, the first groupof fixed locations and the second group of fixed locations, partiallyoverlap each other in X and/or Y direction. In some embodiments, thefirst group of fixed locations and the second group of fixed locationsare the same. One or more detectors, for example, a scanning detectorarray, can be positioned with respect to the first irradiation sourceand the second irradiation source so as to collect emission from thefirst group of fixed locations without collecting emission from thesecond group of fixed locations. In some embodiments, scanning detectorarray can be positioned with respect to the first irradiation source andthe second irradiation source so as to collect emission from both thefirst group of fixed locations and the second group of fixed locations.

The light emitted by markers immobilized on or in the substrate can bepassed through a bandpass filter. The bandpass filter can allow,substantially exclusively, predetermined wavelengths of light from thesubstrate to pass through, wherein the predetermined wavelengths oflight correspond to a portion of the wavelengths of the light signalsemitted by an associated set of markers. The light that passes throughthe bandpass filter can be filtered light. The bandpass filter cansubstantially block the irradiation light from the irradiation sourcesif such light is reflected from the substrate. The portion of thewavelengths of the light signals that can pass through the bandpassfilter can include all of the light signals, or a range of wavelengthsabout the peak intensity of light signals of each respective marker. Forexample, the range of wavelengths about the peak intensity of lightsignals can be between about 5% and about 20% of wavelengths on eachside of the peak wavelength of a given marker, or it can include fullwidth at half max. The collection of the predetermined wavelengths canbe by dispersion, for example, or by use of additional bandpass filters,for example.

According to various embodiments, a conditioning filter can be usedbetween the irradiation source (light source) and the substrate. Thebeam emitted by the light source is also known as an excitation beam ifdesigned to excite a marker, and can be filtered by an excitation filterat an excitation wavelength range. Comparably, a conditioning filter canbe used between a detection zone where a substrate is positioned, and adetector. The fluorescence or luminance emitted by the substrate uponexcitation is also known as an emission beam that can be filtered by anemission filter at an emission wavelength range.

According to various embodiments, a light source can be used to provideexcitation beams to irradiate a substrate having one or more markersimmobilized thereon or therein. In some embodiments, two or moreexcitation beams having the same or different wavelength emissions canbe used such that each excitation beam excites a different respectivedye immobilized on the substrate. The excitation beam can be aimed fromthe light source directly at the substrate, through a wall of thesubstrate, or can be conveyed by various optical systems to thesubstrate, as described herein.

According to various embodiments, one or more filters, for example, abandpass filter, can be used with a light source to control thewavelength of an irradiation beam. One or more filters can be used tocontrol the wavelength of an emission beam emitted from an excited orother luminescent marker. One or more irradiation filters can beassociated with a light source to form the irradiation beam. One or morefilters can be located between the one or more light sources and asubstrate. One or more emission filters can be associated with anemission beam from an excited dye. One or more filters can be locatedbetween the substrate and one or more emission beam detectors.

According to various embodiments, a filter can be used that is a singlebandpass filter or a multiple bandpass filter. As used herein, abandpass filter and a passband filter are used interchangeably. Amultiple passband filter can be, for example, a multiple-notch filter ora multi-Rugate filter. A multiple passband filter can be used with anincoherent light source, for example, a halogen lamp, a white lightsource, and/or one or more LEDs or OLEDs emitting light at differentwavelengths. A multiple passband filter can be used with a multiplelaser-based light source emitting light at different wavelengths.Examples of manufacturing and use of Rugate filters and Rugate beamsplitters can be found in, for example, U.S. Pat. No. 6,256,148 toGasworth which is incorporated herein by reference, in its entirety.

According to various embodiments, a multiple passband filter can be usedwith a dichroic beam splitter, a 50/50 beam splitter, a dichroic beamsplitter that has several “passbands,” or no beam splitter. A multiplebeam splitter can be coated at an angle, causing a variance in athickness across a filter substrate, to compensate for wavelength shiftwith an angle. A beam splitter can be disposed at a low angle along alight or beam path to sharpen edges of the filtered light and can easefabrication. A beam splitter can be disposed at a 45° of incidence alonga light beam path. A low angle can include an angle of incidence lessthan 45° less than 30° or less than 15°. A multiple passband filter canbe formed by coating different light interference materials overrespective areas of a substrate used in a multiple passband filtermanufacture.

A Rugate filter is an example of an interference coating based on therefractive index that varies continuously in a direction, for example,perpendicular or 45° to the film plane. When the refractive index variesperiodically within two extreme values, a minus filter with hightransmittance on either side of the rejection band can be made. PeriodicRugate filters can be manufactured. Rugate notch filters can userefractory metal oxides to achieve coatings with exceptional thermal andenvironmental stability. These filters can be used in place of othertypes of notch filters, particularly where durability and reliabilityare desired. Rugate notch filters are available from Barr Associates(Westford, Mass.). The Rugate notch filter can be used as edge filtersand beam splitters. Filter sizes or shapes are not limitations for theRugate notch filter. The Rugate notch filter can provide environmentaland thermal stability, a broad operating temperature range, narrowrejection bands, variety of shapes & sizes, high throughput, low ripple,and/or a broad spectral range. More information is available from, forexample, www.barr-associates-uk.com, andwww.barrassociates.com/opticalfilters.php. Multiple-notch filters can bemade, for example, with a measured blocking of O.D. 6 or better. Notchfilters with this type of deep blocking level at the light wavelengthcan also afford high transmission close to the light line.

According to various embodiments, excitation levels can increase whenmultiple dyes spaced apart spectrally at different fixed locations areirradiated with excitation beams. This can lead to less spectralcrosstalk. The dye matrix, condition number, and/or deconvoluting in asystem can be improved. The increased excitation levels can providehigher signal levels. Higher signal levels can be seen during theutilization of dyes that emit in the “red” spectrum. The dynamic rangeof the system can be improved. The system can reduce the compensationfor variation in the emission beam intensity for various dyes.

According to various embodiments, the detector can comprise a detectionassembly. An exemplary detection assembly can be used for fluorescencedetection of target polynucleotides in a sample using a device inaccordance with the invention. The detection assembly comprises atranslation stage for positioning a test device. The test device cancomprise an array of addressable detection chambers containingfluorescent detection reagents. The detector in the assembly cancomprise a tungsten bulb (or quartz halogen bulb, 75 W) illuminationsource, a CCD camera, and appropriate focusing/collection optics. Theillumination source can be positioned so as to illuminate the devicediagonally from above (e.g., at an inclination angle of 45 degrees withrespect to the illuminated surface). The optics can comprise two lensesseparated by an emission filter. The first lens collimates the incomingimage for the emission filter, and the second lens which re-images thefiltered beam onto the CCD. The test device is placed at the focal pointof the first lens.

In some embodiments, the CCD can be thermoelectrically cooled,instrumentation-grade front-illuminated CCD (Princeton InstrumentsTEA/CCD-512TK/1). The detection plate of the CCD can comprise a 512×512array of 27 .mu.m square pixels which can cover the entire overheadcross-section of the test device. The camera head can be controlled by acontroller (Princeton Instruments ST-135) which can communicate with acomputer (Quadra 650, Apple Computers) for collecting and processing thesignal data. The detection system can be capable of on-chip binning ofthe pixels. For detection chambers having an overhead cross-section of 1mm.times.1 mm, bins having a size of 2×2 pixels are suitable. Moregenerally, the bin size can be selected on the basis of the totalprocessing time that will be required, the sizes and number of detectionchambers, sensitivity, and signal noise.

According to various embodiments, the detection assembly can comprise acomputer. The computer in the assembly can comprise signal-processingsoftware for selecting an appropriate sub-region in each detectionchamber from which the signal is measured. Such sub-regions can beselected for uniformity of incoming light, to ensure that edge regionsare excluded. The signal image of the device can be recorded and storedat selected intervals, according to the requirements of the assay.Preferably, the signal for each detection chamber is recorded as anaverage signal per bin for the selected sub-region in each chamber,since the size of the selected sub-region in each chamber will usuallydiffer from chamber to chamber. Examples of an addressable array aredescribed in Woudenberg et al., U.S. Pat. No. 6,126,899, which isincorporated herein by reference, in its entirety.

Exemplary systems where the detection system and method of the presentteachings can be incorporated, include, but are not limited to thefollowing, a single molecule sequencing detection system as exemplifiedin FIGS. 1A, 1B, 3A, and 3B, of U.S. Patent Application Publication No.US 2008/0105831 A1, to Reel et al., a single excitation wavelengthdetection system as exemplified in FIG. 1 of U.S. Patent ApplicationPublication No. US 2007/0295917 A1, to Howard, an optical system andmethod for optically analyzing light from a sample as exemplified inFIGS. 14 and 28 of U.S. Pat. No. 7,139,074 B2, to Reel, a fluorescentdetection system as exemplified in FIGS. 9-11B and 13, of U.S. Pat. No.7,177,023 B2, to Reel et al., an electrophoretic system with multi-notchfilter and laser excitation source as exemplified in FIG. 1 of U.S. Pat.No. 7,265,833 B2, to Oldham et al., and a total internal reflectancefluorescence microscope or detection system as exemplified n FIG. 2 ofU.S. Patent Application NO. US 2009/0015912 A1, to Ferenczi, all ofwhich are incorporated herein by reference, in their entireties. Theexemplary systems are merely examples of possible system configurations,and are not meant to limit the teachings of the present invention.

According to various embodiments, the system can comprise a line scannerapproach to imaging. A system configured to implement a line scannerapproach to imaging, can comprise a detector that is a single pixel inwidth in the scan direction. This approach eliminates most of the timespent moving from one position to another, allowing most of the time tobe spent collecting emission photons. For single molecule systems wherethe turnover rate of the fluorophores is generally slow this can createissues with obtaining a sufficient signal to noise ratio at the scanspeed desired to more fully utilize the camera. For a bead basedsequencing system, an optical configuration may be conceived toeffectuate an efficient line scan system, for example, the systemexemplified in FIG. 1 of U.S. Pat. No. 7,265,833 B2, to Oldham et al.,which Patent is hereby incorporated by reference, in its entirety.

In some embodiments, a point scanner is used and can be configured inmany ways, for example, the detector for a point scanner can comprise asingle detector used for a single channel of detection. A beam-splitteror a set of beam-splitters can be used in some embodiments, permittingtwo or more channels of detection simultaneously. The excitation beamcan similarly have a single bandpass, or can have multiple bandpassesused simultaneously or serially.

For next generation sequencing applications, where beads are used thatare typically on the order of one micron in diameter, it is reasonableto achieve an optical resolution of only 500 nm. If a pixel width in thescan axis corresponding to one micron is used, the optical resolution isconvolved with the pixel width, resulting in an effective width of 1.5microns. Thus if one micron beads were too close to each other, theymight not be able to be resolved. This then can affect the width in thescan axis which can be imaged using a line scan system, but theseconcerns can be addressed by using tight focusing of the excitation beamin the scan axis, and a high flux density.

According to various embodiments, the imaging system can be, forexample, the imaging system shown in FIG. 1. The imaging system cancomprise a light source such as a white light source, and a switchingexcitation filter, an emission filter and a beam splitter. Amulti-camera/imaging system, such as a two camera system, can beconsidered for use with such an illumination system. In someembodiments, the system can comprise four cameras. A four camera systemcan comprise a white light illumination system. In such a system, aRugate filter set can be utilized to enable four simultaneousbandpasses. Either a Rugate filter or a dichroic filter can be used toenable two excitation bandpasses. The excitation source can comprise awhite light source, one or more lasers, or other possible illuminationcombinations. The system can comprise, for example, two standard dyesand two big dyes (with a larger Stokes shift), four standard dyes, a bigdye set, two standard dyes and three big dyes, or other dyecombinations.

In some embodiments, the system could comprise a dispersive element suchas a grating prism or prism, with the dispersion orthogonal to thedirection of the scan, to create a spectrum of light. The beads, singlemolecules or other targets can be placed on a fixed grid, and thespacing orthogonal to the scan direction can provide sufficient distanceto accommodate the dispersion of the grating.

According to various embodiments, the system can be configured similarlyto the existing imaging systems. Alternatively, a scanning system can beconfigured and utilized for this purpose, including a point scanner, aline scanner, and an image scanner (e.g. a TDI scanner as shown by wayof example below in FIG. 2). In some embodiments, the system cancomprise a point scanner. A point scanner can be configured in manyways, for example, the detector for a point scanner can comprise asingle detector, used for a single channel of detection. A beam-splitteror a set of beam-splitters can be used permitting two or more channelsof detection simultaneously. The excitation can have a single bandpass,or can have multiple bandpasses simultaneously or in serial.

In various embodiments, one can optimize the throughput of the system,for example, by optimizing the acquisition rate or the pixel readoutrate (number of pixels per second). This can be accomplished using adetector, for example, a multi-tap CCD, a CMOS device, or otherdetector. The detector can be configured to operate in TDI mode. Whenthe system is in TDI mode, an excitation source can be configured toprovide excitation light beam that is the width of a bead, or wider thana bead. In some embodiments, the excitation source can be configured toprovide excitation light beam that is half the width of the bead orless.

According to various embodiments, beads can be on the order of onemicron in diameter. The detector can achieve an optical resolution of500 nm, which is near the theoretical diffraction limit using a NA lens.When the system is configured with a detector that operates in TDI mode,the TDI device provides a mechanism that can allow the beam to be muchwider than a pixel, as it has a number of pixels in the scanningdirection. Additionally, the larger imaging area can allow imaging ofthe entire laser line, even if it is several microns in width. In thisconfiguration, the system can illuminate and optically combiningmultiple beads in a scan axis. In some embodiments, if a pixel width inthe scan axis corresponding to one micron is used, the opticalresolution can be convolved with the pixel width, resulting in aneffective width of 1.5 microns. Thus if one micron beads were close toeach other, they could not be resolved. This then limits the width inthe scan axis which can be imaged using a line scan system, furtherrequiring tight focusing of the excitation in the scan axis, andrequiring a high flux density. A TDI detection device can be configuredto provide a mechanism by which to permit the beam to be much wider thana pixel, as it has a number of pixels in the scanning direction.Additionally, the larger imaging area can permit imaging of the entireexcitation line in the scan axis, even if it is several microns inwidth, thus potentially illuminating and optically collecting frommultiple beads in the scan axis simultaneously.

In various embodiments, the system can comprise a feedback system. Thescanning speed of the stage can be synchronized with the clocking speedof the TDI camera or imaging apparatus using the feed back system. Thesystem can comprise a linear encoder with resolution finer than the sizeof the beads or the pixel size in image space. In some embodiments, thepixel size of a detector is several microns wide. When a 20× systemmagnification is used, each pixel can correspond to about a third of amicron at the bead array. Thus, the resolution of the linear encoder canbe significantly less than a third of a micron. The linear encoder canbe modified to match changes in the size of beads, or to match thespacing of attachment points of single molecules or other areas ofinterest to be imaged.

In some embodiments, the feedback system can create information that canbe outputted to inform the TDI detector or imaging system to clock inthe horizontal direction (scan axis). With this information, the systemcan enable alignment between the detector image and the movement of thestage. To further optimize the system, each of the output taps of a TDIdetection device can comprise an electron multiplying (EM) register.This approach can provide alignment between the different color imageswhen using simultaneous imaging of multiple colors through the samedetector.

In some embodiments, the substrate of the system can comprise one ormore fiducials, for example, distinguishable markings on the substratethat can be used to help maintain the position maps of each bead orspot. Fiducials can be regularly spaced, for example, masked metalfiducials or random, such as bound particles that are reflective,fluorescent, or colored that have been scattered randomly on a slide.Fiducials can correct for unanticipated changes in position. Forexample, thermal expansion or unexpected motion of the slide relative toan optical rule might cause errors. Information about the fiducials canbe with each bead or spot and can be stored in the system. This candramatically reduce any subsequent data processing load. Further, asingle image map can be stored, and portions of that map can be accessedat the same time that the same area is being scanned. The currentlylocal area can then be the only area which is processed, minimizing thesize of arrays associated with the image and map which are processed,for example, deconvolution of the system point spread function (PSF).

In some embodiments, chromatic aberration and differences intransmission across the detector can be addressed. The system cancomprise multiple detectors, for example, a detector for each separatecolor of emission fluorescence. Each detector can comprise a focusadjustment, which can adjust each detector to overcome chromaticaberration in the objective. The detector can comprise correctionfactors to insure proper alignment between color channels. As mentionedpreviously, the system can comprise a beam shaper. Intensity variationsdue to various factors, including vignetting can be compensated forutilizing a beam shaper. The beam shaper can provide a variation in theintensity profile which can increase the flux in those areas at thetarget which appear as having less signal at the image. The beam shapercan provide uniform signal across the image.

In some embodiments, the system can be used in a single moleculedetection system. One issue for a system that deals with singlemolecules is the turnover time of the fluorophores. In general, in orderto get sufficient signal to noise ratio, a minimum observation time isdesired to permit sufficient photons to be emitted. A higher excitationpower might simply saturate the fluorophore, and would result in veryfew additional photons. Therefore, to fully utilize a scanning detectorconfigured to operate in TDI mode, the detector can be kept it in usefor a prolonged time period, to prevent saturation of the pixels. Forexample, if the scan distance is relatively short, then a majority ofthe time may be spent turning around at the ends of the scan, ratherthan actually scanning. There is a further issue that if it desirable toperform scans in quick succession, one to read the fluorophore, and oneto confirm that it has been photocleaved, then the time between thescans may be equal at different points on the array.

According to various embodiments, multiple excitation wavelengths can beused to detect multiple sample components. According to variousembodiments, the apparatus and method can be adapted for use by anysuitable fluorescence detection system. For example, various embodimentsof the apparatus and method can be used in a sequencing system withsingle or multiple samples, for example, in a nucleic acid sequenceamplification reaction, in a sequencing detection system.

According to various embodiments, the system can comprise a scanningdetector that scans in one direction, scanning a first row, then stepsone scan width in the axis orthogonal to the scanned row, and scans backthe other direction, scanning a second row. Alternatively, the systemcan comprise a scanning detector that uses a flyback scan, wherein thedetector scans a row, then returns back to its original position, andthen steps one scan width in the axis orthogonal to the scanned row, andrepeats. If a photocleavage step is desired, two laser lines can beprojected through the detector, one to perform the photocleavage, forexample, at about 355 nm, and one to excite the dyes, for example, atabout 488 nm. The system can also comprise three lasers, two excitationlasers, and one laser for photocleavage. Alternately it may be desirableto have one or more of the laser lines external to the objective. Thisreduces issues with fluorescence and scatter from the optical elementsof the objective. The lasers can be configured to track with theobjective so the excitation light stays on the same part of the image.

In various embodiments, when the system is used to detect singlemolecule sequencing, the spacing between the excitation lasers isgenerally not critical if the entire excitation beam is contained withinthe image area of the scanning detector. In some embodiments, theexcitation beam can overfill that imaging area of the detector. In someembodiments, the excitation beam can under fill the imaging area of thedetector. Where photocleavage is to be performed, the timing can beimportant, as the time between (and during) the photocleavage and theexcitation can permit a first and or a second dNTP to incorporate,resulting in potential for a deletion error. Thus, in variousembodiments, the width of the photocleavage laser line can be optimizedto prevent raising the flux density to the point where photo-damage ofthe fluorophore polymerase or the dNTP might otherwise occur. Inaddition the system can be configured such that the space between thephotocleavage laser line, the excitation laser line, and the width ofthe excitation laser line, can be controlled.

In various embodiments, a rotary stage may be used, avoiding stagestopping or direction reversal. This can be combined with an R stage.The wells or molecule locations can further cover the entire surface, orcan be in tracks, which may occur as radial bands, or as a spiral. Ifradial bands are used, the bands can comprise a short gap in them,permitting the translation of the detector in the radial axis withoutwasting sample beads or molecules, or exposing part of the band to theexcitation and or cleavage light more than once per scan In someembodiments, the system can be used to detect radial beads or arectilinear array of beads. If radial bands are detected, the bands cancomprise a gap in them to prevent wastage of sample beads or molecules.If a rectilinear array of beads is detected, the detector can scan oneway as shown in the FIGS. 3-5.

In some embodiments, it may be desirable to either turn off thelaser(s), or to shutter them while the detector returns to the otherside, or performs a flyback. If multiple bands (corresponding tomultiple scans) are used, either in a rectilinear scanner or a rotaryscanner, the multiple bands can be separated so that the areailluminated orthogonal to the scan axis can be slightly larger than theimage distance orthogonal to the scanner. This can insure that theentire imaged area is illuminated, without also illuminating a portionof the next band/scan. This spacing should take into account both thetolerance in aligning the image area and the illumination area, and anytolerance in the size of the image and or illumination area due todifferent levels of magnification resulting from different optical pathsor variations from shaping the illumination beam.

As shown in FIGS. 3-5, the system can comprise a flow cell with flyback,or there can be multiple flow cells with flyback and translation betweenflow cells. The system can comprise multiple bands in a single flowcell, with flyback and translation between bands. Alternatively theorientation of the excitation and cleavage can be reversed, permittingscanning in alternate directions, removing the need for flyback. In oneexemplary embodiment, the total area of the flow cells can beapproximately the same size. In one embodiment it may be desirable ifthe UV and excitation light do not go through the objective, both toeliminate background and to permit total internal reflectionfluorescence (TIRF) without using an immersion objective. In someembodiments, it can be preferable that the illumination areas are notGaussian, but can, in some embodiments, be of a “top-hat” shape or of ashape that compensates for collection efficiency differences caused byvignetting. The size of the excitation illumination width can be closeto the size of the detected imaging area; for example 128 pixel lines/3lines/micron=about 43 microns. The size of the UV photocleavageillumination width can be the time needed for photocleavage divided bythe time per pixel line/lines/micron; for example 25 msec/(1/50,000lines/second)/3 lines/micron=417 microns. The size of the photocleavagearea can be determined in part by a maximum flux density, in order tominimize photo damage.

In various embodiments, the system can be configured to in a system todetect synchronous single molecule sequencing (sSMS). The sSMS can useinternally quenched dNTPs as substrates for an immobilized processivepolymerase. It is noted that the dNTPs do not necessarily require totalquenching and other labeled dNTP constructs may be used as substrates.In an exemplary application, an acceptor dye may be attached to eachbase through a photocleavable linker (PCL) and a dark quencher may beattached to the polyphosphate terminus. Upon incorporation of adeoxyribonucleotide (dNTP) by the polymerase, the dark quenchercontaining polyphosphate may be cleaved and dissociated. Consequently,the dye on the base is then unquenched, and can be used to signal ordetect the indication of an incorporation event. In various embodiments,when the newly incorporated base has been identified or theincorporation event registered, the dye can then be released byphotocleavage or otherwise inactivated to allow for additional baseincorporation events to occur. Exemplary systems configured to performsSMS detection are exemplified in U.S. Patent Application Publication.Nos. US 2005/0244863 A1, to Mir, and US 2008/0003571 A1, to McKernan etal., and in International Publication No. WO 96/27025, to Rabini, all ofwhich are incorporated herein by reference, in their entireties.

In some embodiments, the photocleavage and detection steps can beperformed in a substantially synchronous manner to provide a convenientmethod by which to conduct sequencing of single molecules. In variousembodiments, subsequent nucleotide incorporation is not expected untilphotocleavage of the fluorescent label for the base has occurred. ThussSMS provides a valuable manner with which to separate and discriminateincorporation events from binding events.

In some embodiments, the time period for detection can be fixed, and thedetection time period can be set large enough to provide sufficientsignal to prevent deletion errors due to insufficient collection ofphotons, or due to base miscalls which result from having insufficientsignal to detect a base, or insufficient signal to accurately determinewhich color, and thus which base was incorporated. At the same time thetime period can also be set low enough to limit excessive illuminationwhich can cause photoactivated degradation of the dyes, enzymes, or DNA.

An exemplary method for performing the above-described process includesthe steps of:

-   -   (1) performing dNTP extension of the desired template(s) to        incorporate a single labeled nucleotide whereby a quencher is        released from each labeled nucleotide to thereby allow detection        of the nucleotide(s);    -   (2) conducting an imaging operation to detect the newly        incorporated nucleotide(s);    -   (3) performing a photocleavage operation wherein the dye        associated with the newly incorporated nucleotide(s) is released        or otherwise inactivated to permit detection of subsequent        incorporation events; and    -   (4) Repeating steps (1) through (3) for subsequent base        extensions.

In consideration of the stochastic properties of incorporation andphotocleavage one may consider the incorporation rates of dNTPs by aselected polymerase. In general, a value may be ascribed to the turnover rate of the polymerase, which is often represented as an averagevalue with a distribution generally around the average value. It will beappreciated that some polymerases have a faster turn over rate thanothers. The cycle time can be similar to the incorporation rate orlonger if desired. Longer cycle times can allow most of theincorporations to occur for greater sequencing throughput but overallrun time and device size will be increased.

According to various embodiments, the time it takes to incorporate asingle labeled nucleotide (incorporation time) can include diffusion,binding, and/or incorporation, which can vary over a wide range of time.In various embodiments, incorporation time comprises an exponentialdecay. The distribution of incorporation time can follow an exponentialdecay. During the incorporation time, a decision can be made as to whatperiod of time should lapse before imaging. In one aspect, the systemcan wait long enough to allow approximately 95% or more of thepolymerase DNA complexes immobilized on a nanochip or substrate to havesufficient time to incorporate one base (either the polyermase or theDNA can be immoblized). This can be recognized as a tradeoff betweensystem throughput and the size of the reaction area. The time betweenscans can depend on average incorporation time and the distributionwidth at a given certain percentage level. For example, if the averageincorporation time is estimated to be approximately 200 ms (5/s), alsocalled the time constant, then in 1000 ms, approximately 99% of thepolymerases will be expected to have finished incorporation. Forphotocleavage, the measured time constant can be approximately 5 ms.Thus, in one example, if the incorporation bases were exposed tophotocleavage (e.g. UV light cleavage) at same, approximately 99% of thedye molecules can be cleaved away in approximately 25 ms.

For photocleavage, the measured time constant may be approximately 5 msfor a particular flux level. Thus, in one example, if the incorporatedbases were exposed to photocleavage (e.g. UV light cleavage) at the sameflux level, approximately 99% of the dye molecules may be cleaved awayin approximately 25 ms. Un-cleaved dyes can be detected during a seconddetection. The results can be use to calculate an insertion error.

According to some embodiments, the cycle time for a single modified basedetection can be determined as follows: (average incorporationtime)×5+(exposure time+readout time)+(average photocleavagetime)×5=1.025+image time. Considering the overlap of the twodistributions, a fraction of quickly incorporated modified bases can bephotocleaved without being detected. By doing this, there can bephotocleavage and incorporation during 1 photocleavage cycle. A largerratio between the two time constants (incorporation/photocleavage) canresult in a smaller error from this source. In asynchronous SMS (aSMS),a slower camera can result in a higher risk of missing a fastincorporation event. aSMS refers to real time SMS where incorporationscan occur any time depending on the enzyme kinetics. If theincorporation rates, and/or the binding and incorporation times, betweenthe four bases have different distributions, then there will likely besystematic error in sequencing for aSMS. The systematic error will beless for sSMS because the system can control the dNTP concentrations tonormalize the incorporation rate for each base, and the variation inbinding and incorporation times are not a significant part of the cycletime.

In considering stochastic properties of single molecule sequencing,which in some respects reflects the distribution of incorporation timeand photocleavage time one can approximate the distribution as a simpleexponential decay as shown in FIGS. 9 and 10. The average value can beused as one time constant where:

For incorporation: average incorporation rate is approximately 5 base/s;the time constant is approximately 0.2 s; and 5 times the constant isapproximately 1 s (approximately 99% of features will have a dNTPincorporated).

For photocleavage: time constant is approximately 5 ms; 5 times theconstant is approximately 25 ms (approximately 99% of dyes will becleaved away, see FIGS. 9 and 10).

According to various embodiments, to avoidcleaving-incorporating-cleaving again all during the same photocleavageevent, the two time constants can be significantly different (in thiscase the ratio is approximately 0.2/0.005=40). An exemplary process cancomprise the following steps: trigger elongation, wait approximately 1 sfor approximately 99% reaction completion, image approximately 1 s(preferentially for as many pixels as practical with a given camera orimaging apparatus), perform photocleavage for approximately 25 ms, andreturn to the original position to start image again.

An exemplary throughput calculation can comprise:

1 s×50,000 pixel/s=50,000 pixels,

Number of features in length=50,000/3=16,666,

Number of features in width=2048/3=682,

Total features=11.4 M,

1000 bases/reaction,

One reaction time=1×1000=1000 s,

Reaction number/day=86400/1000=86.4,

Throughput/day=number of features×reaction number/day×1000bases/reaction, =985 GB/day.

In some embodiments, the flow cell, channel, or channels within thesubstrate can comprise a width of approximately 11.3 mm², with a pitchof 1 uM.

FIG. 11 shows an exemplary set of prisms 500 that can be used asmodulating optics to modulate one or more excitation beams and/or one ormore emission beams during a scanning operation according to variousembodiments of the present teachings. In FIG. 11, set of prisms 500 isshown configured to modulate an excitation beam, for example, a laserbeam. Set of prisms 500 can comprise a first prism 502 positionedadjacent and configured to move with an objective lens (not shown) of adetector (not shown), as the objective lens scans a substrate to detectemissions. Set of prisms 500 also comprises a second prism 504 that isconfigured to be fixed in position with respect to an excitation source(not shown). Set of prisms 500 also comprises a trombone prism 506.First prism 502 and second prism 504 are configured to operate inconjunction with trombone prism 506 such that the distance an excitationbeam travels from its excitation source to any point on the substratecan be the same, thereby rendering the intensity of the excitation beamconsistent regardless of what portion of the substrate is being scanned.According to various embodiments, such a system can prevent changes inthe loss of excitation beam intensity at edge or corner locations of thesubstrate.

As shown in FIG. 11, set of prisms 500 can be configured on atranslation stage such that first prism 502 can move with the objectiveof the detector, at a first rate of travel. Trombone prism 506 can beconfigured on the same translation stage or on a different translationstage but such that trombone prism 506 can move at a second rate oftravel that differs from the first rate of travel. In the embodimentdepicted, the first rate of travel is twice the second rate of travelsuch that, as the objective moves from a first edge of the substrate toan opposite edge of the substrate, first prism 502 and trombone prism506 move at different rates. Over the same length of time, first prism502 moves twice as many distance units, specifically, 200.000 distanceunits, as the number of distance units travelled by trombone prism 506,specifically, 100.000 distance units. Compare the positions of theprisms of set of prisms 500 in the first position identified in FIG. 11with the positions of the prisms in the second position identified inFIG. 11. It is noted that numbers shown in FIG. 11 which contain decimalpoints are not reference numbers but instead are relative units ofdistance.

A set of prisms the same as, or similar to, that shown in FIG. 11 can beused for modulating emission beams according to various embodiments.

FIGS. 12A and 12 B demonstrate representative excitation efficiencycurves and fluorescence intensity curves, respectively, plotted versuswavelength for four different dye markers that can be used in detectingsequencing reactions according to various embodiments, namely, the dyemarkers 5-FAM, JOE, TAMRA, and ROX. These dye markers are exemplary ofthose that can be used in various embodiments where a plurality of dyemarkers are to be used.

In FIG. 12A, the x-axis corresponds to wavelengths, expressed innanometers (nm), emitted by an excitation source. The y-axis correspondsto the percentage of excitation efficiency. As shown in FIG. 12A, 5-FAMhas a maximum absorbance, corresponding to its peak percent excitationefficiency, at about 490 nm. When maximum absorbance of a dye markeroccurs at a given wavelength, it indicates that the dye markerfluoresces at its peak fluorescence intensity when it is irradiated atthat given wavelength. As further shown in FIG. 12A, JOE has a maximumabsorbance at about 526 nm, TAMRA has a maximum absorbance at about 560nm, and ROX has a maximum absorbance at about 588 nm. FIG. 12A alsoshows that, when a dye marker, such as 5-FAM, is irradiated at itsmaximum absorbance wavelength, other dye markers, such as, for example,JOE, TAMRA, and ROX, do exhibit some absorbance, although to a lesserextent than 5-FAM. Any excitation source, for example, a multiple laserexcitation source, can be used to emit the wavelengths indicated on thex-axis.

According to various embodiments, fixed locations on a substrate, forexample, on or in a substrate containing channels, can be scanned whilebeing irradiated with multiple color irradiation sources, for example,multiple color lasers or multiple color LEDS. In some embodiments, oneirradiation source can generate a first wavelength range of light thatcan be used as an excitation beam to excite detectable markers, whileanother irradiation source, used in conjunction with the firstirradiation source, can generate a second wavelength range of light thatcan be, but is not necessarily, different from the first wavelengthrange. The second wavelength range can be designed to photocleaveprotective groups from protected polynucleotides, for example, so that asubsequent nucleotide incorporation step can occur.

According to various embodiments, an irradiation source can beconditioned to provide only a narrow wavelength range of light. Abandpass filter can be used to substantially block all of the unwantedirradiation from the irradiation source. As used herein, “irradiationsource” can include one or more sources of irradiation. An example ofthe results, in the form of graphs demonstrating the effects of aconditioned irradiation source in combination with a bandpass filter,are illustrated in FIGS. 13A through 13D.

According to various embodiments and as depicted in FIGS. 13A through13D, locations on a substrate can be irradiated by two irradiationsources simultaneously, although any number of irradiation sources canbe used simultaneously according to various embodiments. Associatedoptics can be altered according to the number of irradiation sourcesused.

According to various embodiments, a conditioning filter can be used foreach irradiation source or set of irradiation sources. The conditioningfilter can substantially block predetermined ranges of wavelengths oflight emitted by the set of irradiation sources, as previouslydescribed. Each predetermined range that irradiates can correspond to arespective excitation wavelength, as demonstrated, for example, in FIG.13A, or one can correspond to an excitation wavelength range whileanother corresponds to a photocleavage wavelength range. FIG. 13A showsa graph of relative irradiation intensity for each of two irradiationsources of a set of irradiation sources, versus wavelength expressed innanometers. The graph of FIG. 13A depicts the two irradiation sources asgenerating beams in the violet and orange portions of the spectrum,respectively. It is to be understood that various embodiments are notlimited to the above types of irradiation sources, but encompasses anynumber of irradiation sources emitting light in any range of frequenciesaccording to application needs. As depicted in FIG. 13B, eachpredetermined range of wavelengths that passes through the conditioningfilter corresponds to a subset of the wavelengths emitted by eachrespective irradiation source depicted in the graph of FIG. 13A. Thewavelengths that pass through the conditioning filter can be capable ofexciting the markers responsive to each respective irradiation source.

FIG. 13B is a graph of percent transmission of light through theconditioning filter versus wavelength. As shown in FIG. 13B, theconditioning filter can substantially block all irradiation light exceptfor wavelengths around the respective excitation range maximum. Forexample, the conditioned light ranges can correspond to a wavelengthrange of from about 450 nm to about 490 nm, and to a second wavelengthrange of from about 580 nm to about 605 nm, corresponding to the firstand second irradiation sources, respectively. The conditioning filter,and the predetermined ranges capable of passing there through, can befunctions of the irradiation set being used.

According to various embodiments, the conditioning filter can include asingle conditioning filter, or a series of conditioning filters, capableof filtering the light from the set of irradiation sources, and asdescribed in more detail above. The conditioned light can be focusedonto a substrate to be scanned, as previously described above.

FIG. 13C depicts percent light transmission plotted versus wavelength.According to various embodiments, the bandpass filter can allow lightcorresponding to the “blue,” “green,” “yellow,” “red,” and “orange”markers to pass through. The regions or zones corresponding to theirradiation light of the irradiation sources can be blocked. Accordingto various embodiments, the bandpass filter can include a singlebandpass filter, a series of bandpass filters capable of filtering thelight from the irradiation sources, a multi-notch filter, or a Rugatefilter.

FIG. 13D depicts a plot of relative emission intensity versuswavelength, expressed in nm, for the filtered light. FIG. 13D, ineffect, provides a breakdown, by wavelength, of the light transmittedthrough the exemplary bandpass filter. As shown in FIG. 13D, the markersexcited by an excitation source of the irradiation sources used in theexample of FIGS. 13A through 13D emit light in the “blue,” “green,”“yellow,” “red,” and “orange” ranges of wavelengths. Before focusing thelight signals thus filtered onto the detector array of a CCD, adispersion element can be used, such as a grating. TDI can be performedduring data collection with the above-described system embodiments.

FIGS. 14-21 depict various substrates, substrate locations to be imaged,image arrays for use therewith, and excitation beam shapes that can beused in a time-delay integration mode according to various embodimentsof the present teachings. FIG. 14 is an image of a substrate 700comprising a plurality of locations 702 arranged in an orderly array704. Substrate 700 has been scanned according to various embodiments ofthe present teachings. The image represents a square portion ofsubstrate 700.

FIG. 15 is an image of a substrate 710 comprising a plurality oflocations 712 arranged in an non-orderly array 714. Substrate 710 hasbeen scanned according to various embodiments of the present teachings.The image represents a square portion of substrate 710.

FIG. 16 is a broken view of a substrate 720 comprising a plurality oflocations 722 arranged in an orderly array 724. The substrate is to beimaged according to various embodiments of the present teachings. Thelaser excitation beam used to excite markers at locations 726 is in theform of a line 728 that has a width that is only about half of the widthof each location 726 along the line.

FIG. 17 is a top view of a linear image array 730 aligned above the lineof locations 726 shown in FIG. 16, which has been irradiated with theexcitation beam line 728 shown in FIG. 16. Pixels 732 of linear imagearray 730 are shown centered with respect to the line of locations 726.Plural pixels 732 are shown above each location 726 in the line. Thenarrow width of laser line 728 prevents blurring during scanning, butcan be difficult to form as it may lead to diffraction limited in thescan axis.

FIG. 18 is a broken view of a substrate 740 comprising a plurality oflocations 742 arranged in an orderly array 744. Substrate 740 is to beimaged according to various embodiments of the present teachings. Alaser excitation beam 746 is used to excite markers at a line oflocations 748. Laser excitation beam 746 is in the form of a line thathas a width that exceeds the width of each location 748 along the lineof locations.

FIG. 19 is a top view of a linear image array 750 aligned above the lineof locations 748 shown in FIG. 18. Line of locations 748 has beenirradiated with excitation beam 746 shown in FIG. 18. Pixels 752 oflinear image array 750 are shown centered with respect to the line oflocations 748. Plural pixels 752 are shown above each location 748 inthe line of locations. Each pixel 752 of linear image array 750 has awidth that is less than the width of the respective location 748 beingimaged. The narrow width of pixels 752 prevents blurring duringscanning, but may result in loss of photons emitted, as laser line 746may illuminate areas which are not imaged.

FIG. 20 is a broken view of a substrate 760 comprising a plurality oflocations 762 arranged in an orderly array 764, wherein substrate 760 isto be imaged according to various embodiments of the present teachings.As shown in FIG. 20, a laser excitation beam 766 has been shaped intothe form of an area beam that irradiates an area 768 having a widthequal to the width of five lines of locations. As shown area 768 canencompass many locations that can be simultaneously irradiated withexcitation beam 766.

FIG. 21 is a top view of a two-dimensional image array 770 aligned abovethe five-line area of locations 768 shown in FIG. 20. Area of locations768 (FIG. 20) has been irradiated with area excitation beam 766 shown inFIG. 20. Pixels 772 of two-dimensional image array 770 are shown abovethe area of locations 768, and as can be seen, plural pixels 772 areshown above each location 762 in area of locations 768. Each pixel 772of two-dimensional image array 770 has a width that is less than thewidth of the respective location 762 being imaged. Two-dimensional imagearray 770 can be operated in a time-delay integration mode.Two-dimensional image array 770 has neither of the potential limitationsexhibited by the linear scanner previously described. It can image theentire laser line, and the laser line can be relatively easy togenerate. Further, perfect alignment between the laser line and theimage array is not necessary.

Various alternatives to the embodiments of the teachings describedherein are also within the scope of the present teachings. The teachingsare not limited to the specific embodiments described, but encompassequivalent features and methods as would be known to one of ordinaryskill in the art. Other embodiments will be apparent to those skilled inthe art from consideration of the present specification and practice ofthe teachings disclosed herein. It is intended that the presentspecification and examples be considered as exemplary only.

What is claimed is:
 1. A system for detecting emissions from a plurality of fixed locations on a substrate, the system comprising: a first irradiation source configured to irradiate the substrate and disposed for irradiating a first group of fixed locations of the plurality of fixed locations, wherein the first irradiation source comprises at least one laser source and a holographic beam shaper; a second irradiation source configured to irradiate a second group of fixed locations of the plurality of fixed locations, the second irradiation source being fixed with respect to the first irradiation source such that the second group of fixed locations is spaced from and excludes the first group of fixed locations on the substrate; a scanning detector array positioned with respect to the first irradiation source and the second irradiation source so as to collect emission from the first group of fixed locations without collecting emission from the second group of fixed locations; modulating optics disposed between the first irradiation source and the scanning detector array, wherein the modulating optics comprise a set of prisms including a first prism, a second prism, and a trombone prism configured to operate in conjunction to render intensity consistent across the fixed locations irradiated by the first irradiation source; and a translation stage configured to move the first irradiation source, the second irradiation source, and the scanning detector array, together.
 2. The system of claim 1, wherein at each location a polynucleotide is disposed and at least some of the polynucleotides are labeled with respective markers that fluoresce when exposed to excitation light.
 3. The system of claim 1, further comprising a substrate, wherein the substrate is positioned with respect to the first irradiation source so as to be irradiated by the first irradiation source.
 4. The system of claim 3, wherein the substrate comprises a flow cell and a plurality of labeled polynucleotides disposed in the flow cell, wherein the flow cell comprises a plurality of channels or grooves.
 5. The system of claim 1, wherein the scanning detector array comprises a two dimensional charge-coupled device.
 6. The system of claim 1, wherein the scanning detector array comprises a point detector.
 7. The system of claim 1, wherein the scanning detector array comprises a time-delay integration image detector.
 8. A system for detecting emissions from a plurality of fixed locations on a substrate, the system comprising: a first irradiation source configured to irradiate the substrate and disposed for irradiating a first group of fixed locations of the plurality of fixed locations, wherein the first irradiation source comprises at least one laser source; a second irradiation source configured to irradiate a second group of fixed locations of the plurality of fixed locations, the second irradiation source being fixed with respect to the first irradiation source; a scanning detector array positioned with respect to the first irradiation source and the second irradiation source so as to collect emission from the first group of fixed locations without collecting emission from the second group of fixed locations; modulating optics disposed between the first irradiation source and the scanning detector array, wherein the modulating optics comprise a set of prisms comprising at least one trombone prism, the set of prisms configured to operate such that a distance traveled by an irradiating beam from the first irradiation source to any one of the fixed locations irradiated by the first irradiation source can be the same; and a translation stage configured to move the first irradiation source, the second irradiation source, and the scanning detector array, together.
 9. The system of claim 8, wherein the first irradiation source further comprises a holographic beam shaper.
 10. The system of claim 8, wherein the second group of fixed locations is spaced from and excludes the first group of fixed locations on the substrate.
 11. The system of claim 8, wherein at each location a polynucleotide is disposed and at least some of the polynucleotides are labeled with respective markers that fluoresce when exposed to excitation light.
 12. The system of claim 8, wherein the substrate is positioned with respect to the first irradiation source so as to be irradiated by the first irradiation source.
 13. The system of claim 8, wherein the substrate comprises a flow cell and a plurality of labeled polynucleotides disposed in the flow cell, wherein the flow cell comprises a plurality of channels or grooves.
 14. The system of claim 8, wherein the scanning detector array comprises a two dimensional charge-coupled device.
 15. The system of claim 8, wherein the scanning detector array comprises a point detector.
 16. The system of claim 8, wherein the scanning detector array comprises a time-delay integration image detector.
 17. The system of claim 4, wherein the flow cell comprises from 10,000 to 1,000,000,000 grooves for containing individual strands of DNA.
 18. The system of claim 13, wherein the flow cell comprises from 10,000 to 1,000,000,000 grooves for containing individual strands of DNA. 